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‘I am free and happy’: Daria Kasatkina has no regrets ahead of first grand slam as Australian | Simon Cambers

about 14 hours ago
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When Daria Kasatkina announced that she had officially switched allegiance from Russia to Australia, she picked up her phone soon after to be greeted with whoops of delight from another Australian player, Daria Saville.“I was not telling anyone before it came out,” Kasatkina says to Guardian Australia on the eve of the 2025 French Open.“Dasha called me straightaway and she was so excited.She was so happy for me and I felt so happy because she was super-happy for me.“It was so natural and now we’re real neighbours.

I could not have a better neighbour,She’s always happy, she’s one of the happiest people, I’ve known her a long time, but it’s special that she feels so happy for me,And now we’re part of one team,”Saville knows better than most what it is like to switch national and sporting allegiance, having done so in 2014 and going on to marry Australian tennis player Luke Saville and become a citizen,Long-time friends, Saville is now helping Kasatkina to find a place to live near her own home in Melbourne.

“Well, she’s trying,” Kasatkina says.“She’s sending me locations, everything.I have to look deeper into it.”Changing nationality was not a decision that came easy to Kasatkina, but one she felt she had to take.One of the few Russian-born players to publicly condemn the country’s invasion of Ukraine, the fact that she is openly gay means she can’t live the life she wants to in the nation of her birth.

When the opportunity to become an Australian citizen, an idea first broached by her agent, John Morris, to Tennis Australia during this year’s Australian Open, she jumped at the chance,Official meetings followed and forms were completed, if not exactly by Kasatkina herself,“I don’t know the exact details because I was not doing the applications,” she says with a laugh,“As a professional athlete, we’re never doing this stuff,” Luckily, there were no awkward questions and the process was swift, with Kasatkina becoming a permanent resident of Australia on 29 March.

“Of course it’s a big decision,” she says, adding that her family were happy as long as she is happy,“It’s never easy to do something like that,But I am very conscious when I am making this step that I know this is better for my future,I ended up in the situation where I have to make this choice,It’s unfortunate, but I had to make it and I’m happy with the decision.

“Honestly, in the past couple of months, I have become a much happier person.I feel like a lot of weight has dropped off my shoulders.I am free and happy.For me this is the most important thing and … I feel this decision is right.”Australia is happy too, with Kasatkina immediately boosting their credentials as a top-20 player.

The 28-year-old’s results have been up and down since the change, but she is a proven world-class performer, a former semi-finalist at Roland Garros and someone equally adept on grass.Totally comfortable with her decision, the only thing Kasatkina still finds a little strange is when the tournament MCs introduce her as being from Australia.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“I’m still getting used to it,” she says.“It’s a great feeling to represent a country like Australia.It’s just something to get used to, I guess.

I’m very happy with how everyone welcomed me,The first couple of times it did feel a bit strange,Also to see this beautiful flag next to me, I’m getting more used to it, because at the beginning in the schedule I was a bit confused, but now it’s becoming better,”Being Australia’s No 1, and suddenly having an entire new nation behind her, is a fresh experience and even for someone as experienced as Kasatkina, it’s something extra to deal with,“It’s maybe a little bit of additional pressure, especially when I stepped on court for that first match,” she says.

“That was a lot of pressure.But I’m just going and playing every match like before.It’s adding maybe a little pressure but we are facing pressure every single day.”Kasatkina has not had the best of clay-court seasons; in fact she has won just two matches in three tournaments since her switch was announced.But as one of the most talented players on the WTA Tour, with more variety than most, she knows that it could take just one good performance to flick a switch.

“You’re going to have ups and downs,” she says, ahead of a first-round match with the Czech, Katerina Siniakova.“You can be super-ready and still not win many matches and then, next couple of weeks, you may not be feeling amazing, but still somehow you’re there.That’s normal.I just keep working, I keep pushing and sooner or later, the results will come.I’m very positive about that.

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World’s 50 Best Restaurants awards: chef Mindy Wood becomes first Australian to win Champions of Change

For the first time, an Australian has won an international Champions of Change award, part of the World’s 50 Best Restaurants program. Bundjalung restaurateur and former MasterChef Australia contestant Mindy Woods was awarded in recognition of her contribution to community through food.Woods was awarded for her efforts to “preserve and share Indigenous culture through food,” said William Drew, director of content for the World’s 50 Best Restaurants.Italy’s Caroline Caporossi and Jessica Rosval, who run an initiative training migrant chefs in Modena, and Brazilian chef João Diamante, who serves undervalued cuts of meat at restaurant Diamante Gastrobar, won the award in 2024.Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morningWoods, the 11th recipient of the award, will receive an undisclosed financial donation from the organisers to support her Byron Bay initiative Karkalla On Country

3 days ago
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How to turn the dregs of a tahini jar into a brilliant Japanese condiment - recipe | Waste not

A jar of goma dare is a new favourite fixture in my fridge door. This Japanese-style condiment, dipping sauce and dressing made from ground sesame seeds is powerful in flavour, sweet, sour and creamy all at the same time, while the addition of grated ginger and/or garlic makes it wonderfully piquant, too. It’s also very moreish and hugely versatile, meaning you can serve it with everything from a traditional shabu shabu hot pot to cold noodles, tofu, aubergine and slaw; in fact, it’s so tasty I have to stop myself from eating it straight from the jar. My recipe uses the leftover tahini in the bottom of a jar and comes together in the jar itself, so minimising both waste and washing-up. Simply add all the ingredients, scrape down the sides and shake (you can apply a similar method to the ends of a peanut butter jar, too, for a nutty, satay-style twist)

4 days ago
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Pistachio tiramisu and mango shortcakes: Nicola Lamb’s recipes for spring desserts

When mango season is upon us, I love nothing more than thinking of as many waysas possible to eat them. It’s hard to beat the joy of messily eating one over a sink, but these flaky, American-style shortcakes, which you may recognise as similar to scones, are a brilliant mango delivery method. Meanwhile, there are few things that pistachio doesn’t improve, and here pistachio cream, which is conveniently fortified with sugar and fat, and emulsified to a smooth, spoonable paste, is paired with coffee in the form of an airy tiramisu to feed a crowd.Using cold grated butter and performing a few roll, stack and folds will give you towering shortcakes with tender middles and crisp tops.Prep 10 min Cook 1 hr Makes 6For the flaky scones120g very cold butter 250g plain flour, plus extra for dusting 10g baking powder ½ tsp flaky salt 30g caster sugar 130g buttermilk, plus extra for brushing2 tsp granulated sugarFor the whipped cream 150g greek yoghurt 30g caster sugar 150g double creamTo finish3-4 small ripe Indian mangoes (I like alphonso), peeled and cut into thin horizontal strips1 limeGrate the cold butter on to a plate

4 days ago
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Australian supermarket cucumber pickles taste test: ‘I didn’t think any would be this powerful’

Baby cucumbers, dill gherkins and snacky cornichons are put to a blind taste test by Nicholas Jordan and friends, who find there’s a big leap from sour and salty to ‘unnervingly unnatural’I love pickles. I almost always order pickles and/or ferments on restaurant menus, my fridge is regularly stocked with a zoological range of pickle colours and smells, and I find the idea of eating more than 20 different pickles in a single hour thrilling.But this wasn’t a taste test of pickles: it was a taste test of supermarket aisle cucumber pickles, the Wes Anderson films of the stinky food world. Sure, they’ve got some character, but step into that theatre and everyone knows exactly what they’re about to get, and it isn’t depth.The blind taste test consisted of me and 11 friends eating 21 cucumber pickles

5 days ago
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Layer up: spring fillings for filo pies

Filo pies are my go-to for entertaining, but what are the best spring fillings? The wonderful thing about filo pies and tarts is that they look fancy even when they’re knocked up from just a handful of ingredients, they require little more than a green salad to please and, much like the rest of us, they really do benefit from some downtime. “They’re even better at room temperature because the flavour evolves,” says Rosie Kellett, author of In for Dinner, which also makes them perfect for dodging any last-minute entertaining scrambles.Kellett likes to wrap as many spring greens as possible in filo, along with cheese and hot honey butter. “The key to getting a really delicious filo tart or pie is a flavoured butter,” she says, so, rather than simply painting melted butter between every filo sheet so it goes nice and crisp in the oven, she also adds honey and harissa. (In a similar vein, if your pie or tart involves mushrooms, take your lead from Feast columnist Georgina Hayden, who uses butter flavoured with thyme and Marmite

5 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for gildas in carriages | Quick and easy

Gildas are such a lovely pre-dinner snack: really good olives and anchovies on a stick, with any number of variations, such as artichokes, sun-dried tomatoes, bits of cheese … The one I had most recently, at Brett in Glasgow, was beyond wonderful, and featured chicken fat-topped croutons and homemade green chilli sauce with plump Perelló olives and anchovies. Inspired by this, I made a lemon-spiked green chilli and artichoke tapenade for hot focaccia, topped with the same excellent olives and the best anchovies.I don’t usually specify brands in my recipes, but when there are so few ingredients, it really is worth getting the ones recommended below as a treat. They’re very rich, too, so a few go a long way.Prep 15 min Cook 20 min Serves 6 as a starter or pre-drink snack250g focaccia 125g jarred artichokes in olive oil (drained weight), plus 25ml oil from the jar1 tsp sea salt flakes Juice of ½ lemon1-2 large green chillies, depending on your tolerance to heat150g tinned green olives (drained weight; from a 350g tin) – I like Perelló1-2 47½g tins anchovies in oil (27g drained weight) – I like OrtizHeat the oven to 200C (180C fan)/390F/gas 6

6 days ago
cultureSee all
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John Fletcher obituary

1 day ago
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The Guide #192: How reality TV and streaming has shaped 21st-century TV

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s tax bill: ‘If this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one’

2 days ago
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Sónar festival hit with artist boycott over alleged links to Israel

2 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Republicans’ mega-bill: ‘Takes from the poor and gives to the rich, brazenly’

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’: ‘Like the husky guy at a male strip club’

4 days ago